What
is 'Financial Engineering?'
Financial engineering is the use of
mathematical techniques to solve financial problems. Financial engineering uses
tools and knowledge from the fields of computer science, statistics, economics,
and applied mathematics to address current financial issues as well as to
devise new and innovative financial products.
Financial engineering is sometimes referred to
as quantitative analysis and is used by regular commercial banks, investment
banks, insurance agencies, and hedge funds.
BREAKING DOWN 'Financial Engineering'
The financial industry is always coming up
with new and innovative investment tools and products for investors and
companies. Most of the products have been developed through techniques in the
field of financial engineering. Using mathematic modeling and computer
engineering, financial engineers are able to test and issue new tools such as
new methods of investment analysis, new debt offerings, new investments, new
trading strategies, new financial models, etc.
Financial engineers run quantitative risk
models to predict how an investment tool will perform and whether a new
offering in the financial sector would be viable and profitable in the long
run, and what types of risks are presented in each product offering given the
volatility of the markets. Financial engineers work with insurance companies,
asset management firms, hedge funds, and banks. Within these companies,
financial engineers work in proprietary
trading, risk management, portfolio
management, derivatives and options
pricing, structured
products, and corporate finance departments.
While financial engineering uses stochastics,
simulations and analytics to design and implement new financial processes to
solve problems in finance, the field also creates new strategies that companies
can take advantage of to maximize corporate profits. For example, financial
engineering has led to the explosion of derivative trading in the financial
markets. Since the Chicago
Board Options Exchange (CBOE) was formed in 1973 and two of the first
financial engineers, Fischer Black and Myron Scholes, published their option pricing
model, trading in options and other derivatives has grown dramatically.
Through the regular options strategy where one can either buy a call or put depending
on whether he is bullish or bearish, financial
engineering has created new strategies within the options spectrum, providing
more possibilities to hedge or make profits. Examples of options strategies
born out of financial engineering efforts include Married Put, Protective Collar, Long Straddle, Short Strangles, Butterfly
Spreads, etc.
The field of financial engineering has also
introduced speculative vehicles
in the markets. For example, instruments such as the Credit Default
Swap (CDS) were initially created in the late 90s to provide insurance
against defaults
on bond payments, such as muni bonds.
However, these derivative products drew the attention of investment banks and
speculators who realized they could make money from the monthly premium
payments associated with CDS by betting with them. In effect, the seller or
issuer of a CDS, usually a bank, would receive monthly premium payments from
the buyers of the swap. The value of a CDS is based on the survival of a
company - the swap buyers are betting on the company going bankrupt and the
sellers are insuring the buyers against any negative event. As long as the
company remains in good financial standing, the issuing bank will keep getting
paid monthly. If the company goes under, the CDS buyers will cash in on
the credit
event.
Although financial engineering has
revolutionized the financial markets, it played a role in the 2008 financial
crisis. As the number of defaults on subprime
mortgage payments increased, more credit events were triggered. CDS
issuers, that is banks, could not make the payments on these swaps since the
defaults were happening almost at the same time. Many corporate buyers that had
taken out CDSs on mortgage-backed
securities (MBS) that they were heavily invested in, soon realized
that the CDSs held were worthless. To reflect the loss of value, they reduced
the value of assets on their balance sheets, which led to more failures on a
corporate level, and a subsequent economic recession.
Due to the 2008 global recession brought on by
engineered structured products, financial engineering is considered to be a
controversial field. However, it is apparent that this quantitative study has
greatly improved the financial markets and processes by introducing innovation,
rigor, and efficiency to the markets and industry.
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Regards!
Librarian
Rizvi Institute of
Management
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